gddrescue 1.19-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

gddrescue (1.19-2) unstable; urgency=medium

  * [68f127f] Enable hardening for Debian package build. Thanks to Graham
    Inggs <email address hidden> for the patch (Closes: #788326)
  * [c6bc59f] Enable `--enable-linux` option. Thanks to Graham Inggs
    <email address hidden> for the patch (Closes: #788431)

 -- Michael Prokop <email address hidden>  Thu, 18 Jun 2015 17:36:31 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Michael Prokop
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Michael Prokop
Architectures:
any
Section:
utils
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Xenial release universe utils

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
gddrescue_1.19-2.dsc 1.7 KiB 5bbc2dbbf214eb21df5e2abc0b833c74f2670f20a4cb6755a4ce33f30dcd3e4b
gddrescue_1.19.orig.tar.bz2 76.0 KiB 2d543afd13dab1d85123aa9f507cd23d17387af60219b27a3e058c756a7e204b
gddrescue_1.19-2.debian.tar.xz 3.7 KiB 81f330b31884b6b01a036e3c6707f26ecb84d30d03662f5fc762090a87178ed1

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No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

gddrescue: No summary available for gddrescue in ubuntu wily.

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gddrescue-dbgsym: debug symbols for package gddrescue

 The gddrescue tool copies data from one file or block device
 (hard disc, cdrom, etc) to another, trying hard to rescue data
 in case of read errors.
 .
 gddrescue does not truncate the output file if not asked to.
 So, every time you run it on the same output file, it tries to
 fill in the gaps.
 .
 The basic operation of gddrescue is fully automatic. That is,
 you don't have to wait for an error, stop the program, read the
 log, run it in reverse mode, etc. If you use the logfile
 feature of gddrescue, the data is rescued very efficiently (only
 the needed blocks are read). Also you can interrupt the rescue
 at any time and resume it later at the same point.
 .
 Automatic merging of backups: If you have two or more damaged
 copies of a file, cdrom, etc, and run gddrescue on all of them,
 one at a time, with the same output file, you will probably
 obtain a complete and error-free file. This is so because the
 probability of having damaged areas at the same places on
 different input files is very low. Using the logfile, only the
 needed blocks are read from the second and successive copies.
 .
 The logfile is periodically saved to disc. So in case of a crash
 you can resume the rescue with little recopying. Also, the same
 logfile can be used for multiple commands that copy different
 areas of the file, and for multiple recovery attempts over
 different subsets.
 .
 gddrescue aligns its I/O buffer to the sector size so that it
 can be used to read from raw devices. For efficiency reasons,
 also aligns it to the memory page size if page size is a
 multiple of sector size.
 .
 Please note that this is the GNU ddrescue version providing the
 ddrescue executable. The package is named gddrescue because the
 ddrescue version of Kurt Garloff used to have the ddrescue
 package name already.